"'This is the same thing that's going on in everyone I see. It's going on in me. It's getting farther and farther along in me with every tick of my watch. It's what is crawling toward me out of the dark corners of the years to come.'"
Stainton stopped again, barely to sip his champagne.
"That," he said, "is how I came to be afraid of Old Age."
Holt shuffled his feet.
"A horse-kick isn't hereditary," he said.
"Wait," said Stainton. He put aside his extinguished cigar and resumed: "One by one I saw my father's powers fade. I could check them off as they went; powers we are all so used to that we don't know how dependent we are on them: niceties of the palate, differentiation between pleasant odours and unpleasant, delicacies of sight, distinctness of hearing, steadiness, the control of muscles that we are normally unconscious of controlling. These things go, slowly—very slowly—in each of us, and when they are gone, even when they are partly gone, when we never guess that they are gone, but when people about us detect our condition and comment on it, without our so much as dreaming of it——"
He stopped again, and again went on:
"Then there's Death," he said, with an abrupt change. "Did you ever see anybody die, Holt?"
Holt shook his bald head. He did not like this sort of thing.
"No," he admitted.